Subscribe to the Daily call 764-0558 FREE ISSUE I Sic 4 IaiIQ FREE ISSUE VQH XCa.8 oyih 98,TeMcia al AnAbr ihgn enedy aur ,18 Fe"su ite ae RR r0 / until $fall Daily Photo byyJOHN HAGEN JOYOUS WOLVERINE FANS celebrate Michigan's 23-6 wio over the Washington Huskies at the 67th Rose Bowl in Pasadena last week. The win marked the first victory for football Coach Bo Schembechler after five previous attempts. over1nes savor bowl victory - 'We wanted to give Bo a Win011 By JULIE ENGEBRECHT. Unlike their counterparts at other state colleges and universities, Univer- sity of Michigan students will be spared a midyear tuition hike unless there is some "unpleasant surprise" such as the state cutting even more money from the University's allocation, ad- ministrators say. But they add that students returning in the fall can expect a "significant" WUOM, Recreational Sports,} the University Club-these are just a few of the University en- terprises that could lose some, or all, of their funding through a review process designed to save the University some $3 million. Tomorrow's Daily has the complete story. tuition increase for the 1981-82 academic year. Many state universities-including Michigan State-have raised tuition rates for the upcoming semester to compensate for lower-than-expected state allocations. Each MSU student, for example, will be assessed an ad- ditional $20 for each of the two. remaining pre-summer terms at that s chool. -- MOST SCHOOLS raise tuition only in September. University administrators had seriously considered a midyear tuition hike, either in the form of a one-time surcharge or an outright increase, but they cited two reasons for abandoning any such plans: The first, according to University President Harold Shapiro, was the lack of time to inform students and their By MARK MIHANOVIC New Year's Day was a day of retribution for the MW91gpn Wolverines--the consummation of a long struggle to win a bowl game for Coach Bo Schem- bechler. "We wanted to go out there and give Bo a win in the Rose Bowl," said center and co-captain George Lilja. "We went out there knowing it would mean a lot to him if we won. You could tell after the game it really did." SFENIOR DEFENSIVE TACKLE Mike Trgovac also testified to Schembechler's personal jubilance at his first bowl victory after seven such defeats. "He came in and grabbed me, and I've never heard him sing 'Hail to the Victors' so loud. It was tremen- dous," Trgovac said. R Schemb.-hk-r's glee wasr.' easily hidden. When mammoth offensive tackles Ed Muransky and Bubba Paris hoisted their coach onto their broad shoulders after the game, they could have turned off the lights in the grand old stadium. Bo's beaming face could have lit the place up all by itself. IT WAS A MOMENT not soon to be forgotten by those who witnessed it, either those present or those watching on television sets across the nation. As the coach thrust his fists into the California air and gleefully banged on the maize and blue helmets around him, viewers could see the relief on his face. After five unsuccessful trips to Pasadena, what was originally expected to be Schembechler's worst Michigah ream ourvived a Iackkuster first haf andi rode a dominant second one to defeat the Washington Huskies going away, 23-6. It was a New Year's gift which the Big Ten, the Wolverine football program and, of course, Bo desperately needed. "I'm very pleased," Schembechler understated af- terwards. "This football team has given all of us .. . coaches. . . fans.. . a great thrill. This team has done more than any team we've had, talent-wose. Other teams have had more talent. This team was a team, a See BLUE, Page 12 families about a fee increase. He added that there would have been little time for a public discussion. THE SECOND, Shapiro said, was a feeling among administrators that the University should exhaust other means of cutting the budget before relying on increased student funds. "We wanted to make sure that all other avenues were exhausted," Shapiro said yesterdcay. "We hadn't had a chance to really do that yet," Shapiro said. But Shapiro warned that another "unpleasant surprise," such as more emergency budget cuts made by the state, may force the University to levy a tuition surcharge in the middle of the semester. The University's general fund budget, when it was adopted last year, was built on the assumption that the University's state appropriation would be 3 percent more than the previous year's allocation. Since then, the state's economic con- dition has worsened, resulting in a 1980- 81 appropriation at only 95 percent of last year's level. That leaves the University $9.4 million short this fiscal year and $11.1 million next year. All but $3 mi ion of that is being cut by deans and executive committees in schools, colleges and departments. The remaining money will come from savings through program reduction in a number of non- academic units, services, and fun- ctions. Despite these severe cutbacks, ad ministrators said students should be prepared for a "large" and "significant" tuition increase in the academic year that begins in Septem- ber, depending on anticipated state support. New faces in line to register for draft By BARRY WITT Several hundred Ann Arbor 18-year- olds fought yesterday's blizzard to reach local post offices to register for the draft. By late-afternoon close to 200 then had registered at the post office in Nickels Arcade, many more than the 60 who filled out cards on Monday, the fir- st day of this second round of draft registration. All 18-year-olds are required by law to register -this week. CONFUSION OVER whether or not registrants are required to include social security numbers on the forms resulted in some inadvertent breaking of the law. A stay was issued Dec. 30 by a Washington, D.C. Appeals Court against a November lower court ruling See REGISTRATION, Page 9 Y In case you missed it.. While most University students took a break during the past two weeks, news in Ann Arbor didn't stop. For a recap of the major local stories which occurred during Winter vacation, see Page 9. Sixteen candidates vie for five city coun By PAM KRAMER With April city elections in sight, 16 candidates who filed nominating petitions for five City Council seats are mapping campaign strategies. Democrat Robert Faber, a former member of both the city planning commission and city council, is challenging incum- bent Republican Louis Belcher in the mayoral race. DEMOCRATIC candidates in the First and Second wards, and Republicans in the Third and Fifth Wards will face off in primaries Feb. 16 to determine who will represent their par- ties on April 6. Councilman Ken Latta decided not to run for a second two year term, so Democrats Lowell Peterson and Clinton Smith will run against each other in a First Ward primary. The traditionally Democratic ward includes West Quad and South Quad. "Housing is a perennial issue (in the election) ... because the problem hasn't been solved yet," Peterson said yester- day. "Assault is another major issue. We have to work with the University on this problem," he said. SMITH COULD NOT be reached for comment. i positions The winner of the primary faces Republican Stephen Brownell in April. A 32-year resident of the First Ward, Brownell said he thinks the issues in the election are city ser- vices and development problems, such as the Black Pond housing project proposed in his ward. Democrat Leslie Morris, one of only two council members seeking reelection, is campaigning against Robert Ewing in the Second Ward Democratic primary. She said she thinks safety has replaced hotsing as a major concern in the student-dominated ward which includes Bursley Hall. MORRIS, SEEKING her third term on the 11-member council, said both housing and making sure that the ward is not overlooked by the city "because of its high tenant population"' continue to be important concerns. The winner of the Morris/Ewing primary will vie with Republican Toni Burton and Libertarian R. Neil Faiman in April. A senior at the University, Burton ran unsuccessfully last year for the Second Ward seat. She said her campaign is "still very much in the groundwork stage." Faiman, organizing his campaign with the libertarian can- See COUNCIL, Page 3 uaiy Pho oy UM RE INOMLLEY A DEMONSTRATOR STANDS inside the Liberty Street post office yester- day to protest registration for the draft. TODAY Welcome back REETINGS TO THOSE of you who survived during the last two weeks of a diet of leftover turkey and holiday cheer. That's how most of the Daily staff managed to get by. We're back again and publishing six days a week in living black and white. Start the term off on the right foot by calling 764-0558 and reports to students yesterday. Engineering students will have to wait a bit longer to find out how they did last term because the college processes its own reports. According to Associate Registfar Harris Olson, 110 term grade reports still remain homeless because those students failed to give the University their local address. Students who haven't received their reports are advised to rush to the registrar's office and claim their homeless grades. QZ Road to glory What happens to old presidents? Sometimes they get, derway yet to rename any Ann Arbor streets after Michigan gridders. Li Look in the book. Not-so-deft telephone dialers who rely on the directory assistance operator to find out their friends' telephone numbers might find out it's cheaper to look in the book. Beginning in June, Michigan Bell Telephone will charge all residential and business customers 20 cents per each 411 call after a quota of 20 free calls has been filled. According to Michigan Bell Public Relations Official Al Chenault. only small red and silver balloon that was found on a fence Mon- day at the C.W. Dittman home. Although somewhat deflated after its 250-mile journey, the balloon still bore the words "I Was There-The Rose Parade." No one in the neighborhood went to the Rose Parade and the Dittman family believes the balloon was swept over the ocean from Pasadena before it was picked up by southwesterly winds and blown over the area. On the inside A review of the film Flash Gordon appears on the Arts I i